Tuesday, February 03, 2009
New Media Practices in China, Part 4: The Internet
As mentioned in my introductory blog post on new media practices in China, the diffusion of the Internet in China has been extremely rapid, with the nation now having the largest number of Internet users on the planet, many of them with broadband access. According to CNNIC, as of June 2008 the top ten Internet activities in China were: listening to or downloading music, reading news, instant messaging, watching videos, using a search engine, emailing, gaming, using a blog or personal space, participating in a BBS or forum, and shopping (http://www.cinnic.com). Though Chinese use the Internet to read news, according to Guo (2007), much of this news is “infotainment” (e.g., about celebrities) and thus, as mentioned earlier, Chinese cyberspace is mainly perceived as an entertainment medium. Because of the rapid growth of the Internet in China and the particular socio-cultural-political context in which it has emerged, much has been written on the topic in both Chinese and English. A focus that seems to be more prevalent in the Chinese literature is gender differences in Internet usage (Bu, 2002; Yang, Wang, Chen & Wang, 2004; Zhou, 2005). In what follows I will not attempt an exhaustive overview of the Chinese Internet but instead will highlight practices that are especially interesting within the Chinese context. These include the use of blogs, BBS (online forums), and, increasingly, social networking sites. All of these virtual spaces provide an arena where ordinary citizens are able not only to enjoy themselves, but also to express opinions (particularly those that might not be sanctioned in real life), vent frustrations, engage in fantasy, and mobilize for collective action (within limits).
The first blog went online in China in 2002, and since then the number of bloggers has increased dramatically every year. In 2006, there were 33 million blog spaces in China and in 2007 this number had risen to 40 million. By June 2008 the figure had increased to 107 million, with more than 42 percent of those online in China stating that they had their own blog (http://www.cinnic.com). According to CNNIC’s latest report, by the end of 2008 China had 162 million bloggers (http://www.cnnic.cn/uploadfiles/pdf/2009/1/13/92458.pdf). Popular blog hosting sites in China include Sina.com, Sohu.com, Bokee, Blogbus, and MSN Spaces. Of course, not all of China’s millions of blogs are active, nor are they political. Like their western counterparts, most are personal narratives written by young people, usually college students, about their daily lives (MacKinnon, 2008a). Still, one analysis of global blog-posting over a 24-hour period found the activity of Chinese netizens on MSN Spaces to be three times that of any other country (Hurst, cited in MacKinnon, 2008b).
Though the Chinese blogosphere has become an important source of information outside official (state) media channels for many of China’s netizens, the most popular blogs in China are those written by celebrities, including movie stars, authors, athletes, and successful entrepreneurs (Nie & Li, 2006). During one point in 2006, the blog of Chinese actress Xu Jinglei even displaced Boing Boing as the number one visited blog in the world, according to Technorati. As elsewhere, celebrities in China capture the public’s attention because of their larger than life personas and the fantasies projected by their lifestyles. What first catapulted blogging into popular consciousness in China, however, was the sex diary of Mu Zimei (real name Li Li), a young woman in Guangzhou (in southern China) who stirred up controversy in 2003 when she began blogging about her active sex life (often quite explicitly), her multiple sex partners (some of whom she publicly named), and her rejection of conventional notions of romantic love. For example, she told one western reporter, “I do not oppose love, but I oppose loyalty. If love has to be based on loyalty, I will not choose love” (Yardley, 2003). As James Farrer (2007) notes, the “Mu Zimei phenomenon” brought the issue of sexual politics into the Internet age in China. After a notorious post about a one-night stand with a Chinese rock star, Mu Zimei’s blog became the number one blog in China for a time, gained substantial attention from numerous media outlets, and invoked admiration as well as scorn from journalists and netizens alike who wrote articles and posted comments in online forums. Although her blog was eventually shut down, she was fired from her job, and her book was banned, she continues to make headlines through, for example, uploading podcasts of her sexual encounters. She has also gained the admiration of many young Chinese women and has inspired numerous imitators, the most famous being Furong Jiejie (Sister Hibiscus) and Liumang Yan (Hooligan Yan). Archived versions of her blog are available online (http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.wenxue.com/T3/?q=blog/353), and she even has her own entry in Wikipedia’s English version (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muzi_Mei).
Of course, China does have its share of bloggers who focus on social or political issues rather than pleasure and entertainment. The degree of freedom they have to address sensitive political topics (anything from corruption to individual rights) seems to ebb and flow with the political winds of Beijing. While many noticed a somewhat relaxed atmosphere in the period leading up to and during the Olympics, the current crackdown on websites deemed vulgar or pornographic seems motivated as much by a desire to limit social and political commentary as it does to clean up “harmful” sexual content. This seems particularly true in the wake of Charter 08 – a document posted on the Internet in December of last year calling for greater democratic and legal reforms, and thus far carrying over 8,000 signatures (for a link to a translation and articles about Charter 08 see http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2008/12/china-detains-prominent-dissident-ahead-of-human-rights-day/). This situation has led to a long-term debate about the potential of the Chinese Internet (the blogosphere as well as online forums, discussed below) to serve as a public sphere in China (Damm & Thomas, 2006; Esarey & Xiao, 2008Giese, 2006).
Although blogs are a relatively new addition to China’s Internet environment, online forums and “bulletin board systems” (or BBS) have been popular in China since the late 90s, and they continue to be a virtual space where people feel comparatively free to post news and opinions. This is largely due to the fact that their “free-for-all structure” allows for more anonymity even though many are more closely regulated now than they were in the past (MacKinnon, 2008b). Another reason is that there seem to be as many online forums as there are available topics. Online forums have given rise to various forms of mobilization related to everything from environmental protests to exposing government lies about tainted products. They have also been the arena for what many regard as distasteful forms of “Chinese cyber nationalism” (Xu, 2007). For example, China’s “angry youth” (fenqing) have used BBS and online forums to voice outrage, some of it quite violent, at what are perceived as affronts to China’s national sovereignty or dignity, as evidenced in the anti-Japan protests of 2005 (Liu, 2006) and most recently during the controversies surrounding the March 2008 uprising in Tibet and the 2008 Olympic Torch relay.
These sites have also become the location for a peculiar form of cyber vigilantism known as the “human flesh search engine” (ren rou sou suo), basically an Internet mob that tracks down real individuals for alleged crimes, posts their private information online, and heaps verbal abuse upon them (Liu, 2008). The most notorious case involved a woman, who, after posting the details of her husband’s extra-marital affair online, jumped from a window to her death. After her “death-blog” spread online, netizens took it upon themselves to find the “cheating husband,” (named Wang Fei) provide his personal information for all to see, and then harass him in real life. Other targets have been a woman who smashed a kitten’s head with her high-heeled pumps and a Chinese student at Duke University who had tried to mediate between pro-Tibet and pro-Chinese protestors during the Olympic Torch relay. Many attribute this form of mob behavior to Mao-era customs of “people’s war” and “struggle” or to a “herd mentality” (http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=964203448cbf700c9640912bf9012e05). A recent survey conducted by the China Youth Daily online found that 80 percent of those polled agreed that human flesh search engines should be regulated in some manner (http://news.xinhuanet.com/politics/ 2008-06/30/content_8462156.htm). Most recently, Wang Fei (the harassed husband) won a law suit against the web site that posted his deceased wife’s blog (http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-12/18/content_10525436.htm).
The practice of the human flesh search engine originated through an entertainment website called mop.com in 2001 with a game where participants were supposed to gather trivia about films, songs, and books and post clues on the website’s “human flesh search engine” area in order to win “mop money.” Mop.com is now a sort of Chinese MySpace and it represents the growing popularity of social networking sites in China. Because most of these sites are relatively new, like many of the practices discussed in this section, there is very little academic research on Chinese SNS. However, although online forums and blogging continue to be extremely popular (for example, the Fourth Chinese Bloggers Conference was held in Guangzhou from November 15-16, 2008), social networking has begun taking off in China. This has caused some such as blogger Maitian to suggest that blogging has run its course in China, particularly since QQ (an online chat platform) and social networking sites are more interactive (http://maitian.blog.techweb.com.cn/archives/233). China now has its own version of Facebook, called Xiaonei (see the image above), with 30 million users, and 51.com, another social networking site, has 100 million (Yu, Zhang, & Li, 2008). As these gain popularity and as more SNS emerge, they are becoming fertile ground for research on digital youth in China.
A final Internet practice worth mentioning involves the techniques that more politically-minded, savvy netizens use to get around Internet censorship. Not surprisingly, a whole body of western-based scholarship and media accounts are concerned with examining the government’s protracted efforts at controlling the Internet and censoring information through methods that are both technological (the “Great Firewall”) and human (“little sister is watching you”) (French, 2003; Zhang, 2006; Zittrain & Edelman, 2003). Despite the actual reality of censorship in China, the majority of Internet users do not seem to be as concerned about this. However, users who do want to express views the government might frown upon (or worse) have invented extremely creative methods to get their messages out, as the graphic below demonstrates.
References
Bu, W. (2002). Shehui xingbie shijiaozhong de chuanbo xinjishu yu nuxing (New communication technology and women in the gender light). Funu Yanjiu Luncong (Collection of Women’s Studies), 45(2), 37-42.
China Ministry of Information Industry, 2007 National Communications Industry Development Statistical Report (in Chinese).
Damm, J., & Thomas, S. (2006). Chinese cyberspaces: Technological changes and political effects. London: Routledge.
Esarey, A., & Xiao, Q. (2008). Political expression in the Chinese blogosphere. Asian Survey, 48(5), 752-772.
Farrer, J. (2007). China’s women sex bloggers and dialogic sexual politics on the Chinese Internet. China Aktuell: A Journal of Contemporary China, 36(4), 10-44.
French, H. (2006, May 9). “As Chinese students go online, Little Sister is watching.” New York Times. Retrieved May 10, 2006, from http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/09/world/asia/09internet.html
Giese, K. (2006, January). Challenging party hegemony: Identity work in China’s emerging virreal places. Hamburg: German Overseas Institute.
Goldkorn, J. (2005). Chinese online celebrities: From doggy style to hibiscus hag. Retrieved February 3, 2006, from http://www.danwei.org/media_and_advertising/chinese_online_celebrities_fro.php.
Guo, L. (November 2007). Surveying Internet Usage and its Impact in Seven Chinese Cities (The CASS China Internet Project Survey Report 2007): Center for Social Development, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Liu, A. X. (2008, November 2). Human flesh search engines? Niu! [Electronic Version]. The Guardian from http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/nov/02/chinathemedia-blogging.
Liu, S.-D. (2006). China’s popular nationalism on the Internet. Report on the 2005 anti-Japan network struggles. Inter-Asia Cultural Studies, 7(1), 144-155.
MacKinnon, R. (2008a). Blogs and China correspondence: Lessons about global information Flows. Chinese Journal of Communication, 1(2), 242-257.
MacKinnon, R. (2008b). Flatter world and thicker walls? Blogs, censorship and civic discourse in China. Public Choice, 134(1), 31-46.
Meng, W. (2004). Wangluo hudong (Internet Interaction). Beijing: Economy and Management Publishing House.
Nie, M., & Li, J. (2006). Mingren boke de chuanbo tezheng fenxi (The communication characteristics of celebrity blogs). The Social Science Journal of South Central University 12(6), 746-751.
Xu, W. (2007). Chinese cyber nationalism: Evolution, characteristics, and implications. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
Yang, Y., Wang, G., Chen, W., & Wang, J. (2004). Xingbie rentong yu jiangou de xinli kongjian (The psychological space of gender identity and structure). In X. Meng (Ed.), Zhuanxing shehuizhong de zhongguo funu (Chinese women in a changing society). Beijing: Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Publishing House.
Yardley, J. (2003). Internet sex Column thrills, and inflames, China. New York Times.
Yu, H., Zhang, Z., & Li, L. Brand experience on SNS: Personal + experiential + interactive = Enhanced emotive connection between brands and youth.” http//: chinayouthology.com/blog
Zhang, L. (2006). Behind the ‘Great Firewall’.” Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies, 12(3). 271-91.
Zhou, Y. (2005). Nuxing yu hulianwang yanjiu xianzhuang huigu (A review of studies of the female sex and the Internet). Funu Yanjiu Luncong (Collection of Women’s Studies), 64(2), 71-76.
Zittrain, J., and Edelman, B. (2003). Empirical analysis of Internet filtering in China. Cambridge, MA: Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Harvard Law School.
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The latest English language report on Internet use from the China Internet Network Information Center is available here:
http://www.cnnic.cn/download/2008/CNNIC22threport-en.pdf
It notes that “The size of netizens who have updated their blog/personal space within half a year surpassed 70 million, and the growth rate of users who upgraded their blog/personal space within half a year rose as high as 43.7%.” (p. 24) This is a startlingly high figure compared to Western countries but can be accounted for by the youth of the online community.
China is going to be a huge customer for the things on offer on internet. After all, China is world’s largest population
http://learnpianoonline.com/welcome.html
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